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- How to Check If Your WordPress SEO Is Actually Workingby Nouman Yaqoob on 06/05/2026 at 10:00
Many WordPress site owners keep publishing content for months but still aren’t sure if their SEO is actually working. The tricky part is that the results are usually already there but they’re just not always easy to notice at first glance. Instead of appearing in… Read More » The post How to Check If Your WordPress SEO Is Actually Working first appeared on WPBeginner.
- Introducing Universally: Translate Your Entire WordPress Site with AI in Minutesby Syed Balkhi on 05/05/2026 at 11:17
Ever wished you could double your traffic by reaching international audiences who don’t speak English? Imagine if you could click a few buttons to translate your entire WordPress site into 100+ languages without hiring a developer or professional translators. Sadly, most website translation tools are… Read More » The post Introducing Universally: Translate Your Entire WordPress Site with AI in Minutes first appeared on WPBeginner.
- Contact Form 7 Freezes New Features – What WordPress Users Should Do Nextby Editorial Staff on 04/05/2026 at 10:00
Since the early days of WordPress, Contact Form 7 has been helping website owners add simple forms to their sites. If you’ve trusted it on your own site, then you made a perfectly reasonable choice that millions of other site owners have made, too. But… Read More » The post Contact Form 7 Freezes New Features – What WordPress Users Should Do Next first appeared on WPBeginner.
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- One Click, Total Shutdown: The "Patient Zero" Webinar on Killing Stealth Breachesby info@thehackernews.com (The Hacker News) on 07/05/2026 at 13:50
The hardest part of cybersecurity isn't the technology, it’s the people. Every major breach you’ve read about lately usually starts the same way: one employee, one clever email, and one "Patient Zero" infection. In 2026, hackers are using AI to make these "first clicks" nearly impossible to spot. If a single laptop gets compromised on your watch, do you have a plan to stop it from taking down
- PAN-OS RCE Exploit Under Active Use Enabling Root Access and Espionageby info@thehackernews.com (The Hacker News) on 07/05/2026 at 13:34
Palo Alto Networks has disclosed that threat actors may have attempted to unsuccessfully exploit a recently disclosed critical security flaw as early as April 9, 2026. The vulnerability in question is CVE-2026-0300 (CVSS score: 9.3/8.7), a buffer overflow vulnerability in the User-ID Authentication Portal service of Palo Alto Networks PAN-OS software that could allow an unauthenticated attacker
- ThreatsDay Bulletin: Edge Plaintext Passwords, ICS 0-Days, Patch-or-Die Alerts and 25+ New Storiesby info@thehackernews.com (The Hacker News) on 07/05/2026 at 11:33
Bad week. Turns out the easiest way to get hacked in 2026 is still the same old garbage: shady packages, fake apps, forgotten DNS junk, scam ads, and stolen logins getting dumped into Discord channels like it’s normal. Some of these attack chains don’t even feel sophisticated anymore. More like some tired guy with a Telegram account and too much free time. The worst part is how often this stuff
- Day Zero Readiness: The Operational Gaps That Break Incident Responseby info@thehackernews.com (The Hacker News) on 07/05/2026 at 10:54
Having an incident response retainer, or even a pre-approved external incident response firm, is not the same as being ready for an incident. A retainer means someone will answer the phone. Operational readiness determines whether that team can do meaningful work the moment they do. That distinction matters far more than many organizations realize. In the first hours of a security incident
- PyPI Packages Deliver ZiChatBot Malware via Zulip APIs on Windows and Linuxby info@thehackernews.com (The Hacker News) on 07/05/2026 at 09:20
Cybersecurity researchers have discovered three packages on the Python Package Index (PyPI) repository that are designed to stealthily deliver a previously unknown malware family called ZiChatBot on Windows and Linux systems. "While these wheel packages do implement the features described on their PyPI web pages, their true purpose is to covertly deliver malicious files," Kaspersky








